Saturday, November 9, 2013

STUART J. BYRNE MEETS RICHARD S. SHAVER - CHICAGO 1947

The following is an excerpt from Saved by an Angel, a
biographical memoir by the late Stuart J. Byrne, whose business career included
international management, system analysis, multi-country system installation,
and large scale procurement and inventory control management for employers such as
Litton Industries and NATO.It recounts
a 1947 meeting between Byrne and Richard S. Shaver, who became one of science
fiction's most controversial figures when his claims (that he had personally
discovered underground caverns filled with the abandoned scientific machinery
of the Lemurians, who had fled Earth when the sun's rays changed millions of
years ago) were presented and championed by editor Raymond A. Palmer in the
pages of Amazing Stories. At the time of this meeting the Shaver controversy,
known as the Shaver Mystery in Amazing, was at its height.

Futures-Past
Editions is presenting this excerpt for a short time, due to
the increased interest in things Shaverian following the publication of War over Lemuria, Richard
Toronto's succinct and levelheaded account of the Shaver Mystery, as well as
Shaver and Amazing Stories' editor, Raymond A. Palmer, the two men whose
personalities and positions made the Mystery grip the world for a short,
meteoric moment, leaving both men's lives in ruins.

"I don't
recall whether it was by bus or thumb that I found my way to Shaver's place, a
cottage at the edge of what I believe was Fox Lake, northwest of Chicago.Nor do I recall his features other than the
fact that he never smiled.But he did
express an intense interest (he was always intense) in my South American
experiences.This related not only to my
Incan lore and following the trail of Pizarro in the Andes, but particularly my
association in Lima with the renowned explorer, Thor Heyerdahl, at the time of
his prepping the famous KonTiki expedition.Heyherdahl had been interested in my account taken from the Royal
Commentaries, with regard to an invasion of giant cannibals into northern Peru
three centuries ago.This was because it
tied into his theory concerning the Puget Sound Indians who were giants and had
disappeared.His theory was that they
had migrated south while riding rafts on the ocean currents.

Shaver was keenly interested in anything
pertaining to giants, so I commented that this was in contrast to his
underground Deros who, according to his account, were dwarfish ogres.He gave me a penetrating look and insisted
that somewhere there must be a subterranean world of giants.In support of this he quoted Genesis
6:4:"There were giants in the
earth in those days."And he asked
me to pay particular attention to the preposition, "in" (i.e., in the
earth).He said there must be something
profound about it, since it can be found in any King James version whereas the
Catholics got to it and changed it to "on the earth."

This was how we at least did a little
professional bonding during the first few hours of our meeting.After a while, however, there were strange
gaps of silence during which he watched me with a knowing intentness.He pointed out what I hadn't noticed, that I
had begun to pace back and forth.

"You feel tense," he stated.He did not say that it seemed to him that I
was tense.

The eerie part was that he told me that I was
tense.

And I confessed, telling him that I was
somehow becoming increasingly uptight.

"I feel like I could take your
typewriter and throw it through the window," I told him.

My actual words.)

"It's Max," he said."He's getting to you."

Then the real story came out – the one I had
come for.But there was something darker
in the theme than I was prepared for.In
the Shaverian underworld, ancient machines that had generated oxygen were
nuclear powered but had deteriorated.The resulting radiation had been the cause of these creature's
degeneration, but the degeneration had been of mind, as well.Because of their dwindling numbers, and
knowing that any attempt to emerge into the surface world would result in their
decimation, they had developed a negative mind-set that nurtured a hatred of
humanity and the desire to either control us or destroy us.To this end they were equipped with ancient
ray projectors which could inflict pain or in some cases madness, suicidal or
murderous inclinations.However
preposterous all this might appear to be, the fact challenging me that day was
that something was building me up to some kind of an explosive reaction.

As to the one called "Max," Shaver
explained that this little ogre was determined to drive me away.Then he gave me the shock that he couldn't
help the fact that Max was "queer" for him and was jealous of anybody
who got too close to him.(As I
reflected later, this might explain what had happened to his
"familiar," the depilated angora cat.)The whole matter was to me both ridiculous
and intolerable, so I asked him, point-blank, what the hell I was supposed to
do about it.He quietly suggested that
getting out of Chicago would be a practical solution.

I had planned to remain in Chicago for
another week before going on to my home town of St. Paul.This was because Ray Palmer was planning a
little "open house" affair at his Chicago home to allow authors and
leading sci-fi fans to mingle.Both I
and Shaver were on the RSVP list, so I told him I was going to hang around until
I could at least attend that event.He
merely shrugged and said it was my call and that I was not to hold him
responsible for any of the consequences.

There were consequences.

I can firmly attest to the fact that, in my
hotel on the night before Ray's party, I was "visited" by an
excruciatingly vivid nightmare.I was
floating six feet above my bed while giants were carving out my armpits with
razors.

The next assault came the next day while I
was at the Palmer affair.Shaver
apparently knew what was happening because he finally sidled up to me and spoke
over my shoulder.He asked me, "Is
he getting to you?"I told him that
he had to do something – to call Max off – because I had two swords up my back
and wasn't going to be able to stand it much longer.He merely shrugged again and reminded me that
my only recourse was to get out of Chicago.

I said goodbye to Ray with the excuse that I
wanted to visit a certain author in town that afternoon.Later, while walking up Western Avenue in
Chicago, I had to stop because of a sensation that my lungs were filling with
sulphur.There was no construction
project nearby or any other possible source of the gas.So in spite of all traditional logic and
sanity, I spoke to the sidewalk, meaning Max.I told him to lay off and I would leave.

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